In this Adult Sunday School message, Pastor Albert N. Martin addresses the question, "Is Christmas for the Christian?" by expounding principles of Christian liberty from Romans 14 and 1 Corinthians 8-10. He argues that celebrating Christmas is neither morally obligatory nor forbidden, but falls under the doctrine of Christian liberty. Martin outlines key principles for navigating such issues: strong and weak consciences will exist in the church, believers must not judge or despise one another, each must be fully persuaded in their own mind before the Lord, and liberty must be exercised with love and sensitivity to avoid causing a brother to stumble.
Primary Texts
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Romans 14:1-23This entire chapter is read and systematically expounded as the primary biblical framework for understanding Christian liberty and its application to Christmas.
Introduction to the Study: Why Address Christmas?0:03
Is Christmas a Moral Obligation for Christians?3:29
Is Christmas a Moral Obligation NOT to Celebrate for Christians?6:45
Christmas and the Doctrine of Christian Liberty11:04
Reading Romans 14: Principles for Christian Liberty17:13
Maintaining Peace in the Church Regarding Christmas22:57
Principle 1: Recognizing Strong and Weak Consciences24:55
Principle 2: No Despising or Judging28:16
Principle 3: Each Answers to Christ Alone32:37
Principle 4: Be Fully Persuaded in Your Own Mind Before God33:49
Principle 5: Exercise Liberty with Love and Sensitivity to Others40:20
Conclusion: Application to Christmas and Beyond43:11
Key Quotes
“Is a Christian under moral obligation to celebrate Christmas? That is, as a Christian's conscience, enlightened by Scripture, knows that he has a moral obligation to honor the Lord one day in seven, the Sabbath, the Christian Sabbath, Lord's Day, as he has a moral obligation to come to the Lord's table, this do in remembrance of me, a moral obligation to gather with God's people, forsaking not the assembling of yourselves together, is a Christian under moral obligation to celebrate Christmas?”
“For some Christians, it is sin to celebrate Christmas. In their consciences, the association of the very word, Christ Mass, gives them real problems. Their understanding of the origin of the celebration, that when the Roman Empire was, quote, Christianized, all of the major pagan holidays were also Christianized, and Christmas was one of them.”
“All right. It fits into the category of what we know as the doctrine of Christian liberty. And historically, that term, Christian liberty, refers to those things which are not expressly commanded by Scripture, or expressly forbidden by Scripture, and concerning which good and godliness, holy Christians may have a differing pressure of conscience.”
“God alone is Lord of the conscience, who has left it free from the doctrines and commandments of men, which are in anything contrary to his word or not contained in it. So that to believe such doctrines or obey such commands out of conscience is to betray true liberty of conscience and the requiring of an implicit faith in God.”
“To his own Lord he stands or falls. Yes, he shall be made to stand, for the Lord has power to make him stand. In other words, the apostle says, look, you must mutually recognize that you stand under the same Lord, and you answer to the same Lord, and he has enshared his Lordship with you. So get off the throne.”
“You have got to take the time before God with an open Bible to wrestle through this issue for yourself. No second-hand actions based upon second-hand convictions. Let each one be fully assured in his own mind.”
“A Christian is one who from the depths of his being has not only embraced Jesus as his only substitute and sin bearer, but he's embraced him as his sovereign Lord. Lord over his holidays. Lord over what he eats and doesn't eat. Lord over the days he'll keep and the days he doesn't keep. His Lordship extends to every single facet of my life.”
“On matters of liberty, our basic dress styles, and our basic living styles, and the rest, there should be a broad spectrum of expression within any healthy congregation, and when you begin to see a wooden conformity, you know that people have given up being persuaded in their own minds, and they've begun to just go with the flow and fall in with the consensus.”
Applications
Believers
Those who celebrate Christmas should not look down on those who don't, even in their hearts.
Those who don't celebrate Christmas should not judge those who do, calling them 'unspiritual' or 'unenlightened.'
Exercise your liberty in Christ with deep sensitivity to how it will affect your brother, being willing to back off if it causes him to sin against his conscience.
Show love to a brother with scruples about Christmas by not inviting him to Christmas-specific celebrations, but rather to non-Christmas contexts.
All listeners
Think and act in a biblical way with respect to the Christmas holiday.
Articulate why a Christian is not under moral obligation to celebrate Christmas.
Think right to do what's right, wrestling with principles rather than just actions.
Recognize that Christ alone is Lord of the conscience and do not try to usurp His authority over your brother.
Take time before God with an open Bible to wrestle through issues of liberty for yourself, not relying on second-hand convictions.
Ask, 'Lord Jesus, can I, before your face, celebrate Christmas?' and act according to that persuasion, regardless of external pressure.
Do not divorce your Christmas celebration from Christ; live before the face of your Lord even during the holiday.
Keep Christmas Day as unto the Lord, without judging those who celebrate it differently.
Receive one another with strong and weak consciences.
Do not sit in censorious judgment or look down on others regarding matters of liberty.
A full transcript is available on the
tab. 125 paragraphs, roughly 46 minutes.
Machine transcription
Introduction to the Study: Why Address Christmas?
The following message was delivered on Sunday morning, December 15, 2002, in the Adult Sunday School class at Trinity Baptist Church in Montville, New Jersey. Now, just a word of explanation as to what I'm doing up here this morning. As those of you who attend this place know, Pastor Carlson is just completing a guided study in Dr. Carson's book on spiritual reformation priorities in the prayers of Paul.
There will be one more sort of catch-all review study in that book and in its biblical content. And then you will be guided in a study in one of the Gospels. We're still wrestling whether it's going to be the Gospel of Luke or the Gospel of Matthew. We've been seeking to find a book that is not a detailed commentary, that is about the size of Dr. Carson's book, suited to the Gospel of Luke. It's not suitable for an adult class, not the kind of book that a preacher would use as his primary books of study were he preaching through one of the Gospels. But as we have weighed the various emphases in our ministries, we felt it was time to have a good dose of a first-hand, lengthy glimpse of our Lord Himself as He is set forth in the Gospel records. And God willing, that study will begin the last Lord's Day, of this year.
So, here we are. I have a one-off opportunity to lead the class. And as I've reflected, there have been several things that have been kind of churning around in my mind and in my spirit. And I had thought that it might be a good opportunity to have an open forum.
Periodically over the years, we've had those in which you are given the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up.
And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up.
And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. And I've had the opportunity to raise any question relative to the various ministries that have been set up. , as I reflected more on the issue, and realized that we have a number of people who have joined the Church, visitors among us, who have not been present when I have taken up the whole subject of the Christian in relationship to Christmas, I thought it would be good to have a guided study on the whole subject of the Christian and his relationship to the celebration of Christmas. And I have a two-fold purpose in doing this.
Number one is to see how much you old-timers have really absorbed from past ministries. This is going to be a public testing time to see how much you have grasped, and then for those who are newer among us, I hope it will not only give you some basic reference points that you might think and act in a biblical way with respect to this holiday that, like it or not, is upon us, around us, under us, and any other preposition you want to use. And so it's for that purpose that I decided to...
...lead a guided discussion on the subject of the Christian's attitude and actions regarding the celebration of this holiday called Christmas.
Is Christmas a Moral Obligation for Christians?
All right? So this is going to be the Socratic method. I'm going to ask a question, and if you're all mute, I'll stand here mute until somebody overcomes his or her reluctance and responds to my question, and we think through this thing together with open Bibles. Now listen very carefully.
They're not trick questions, but the answer that may appear to be the right one initially, if you think about it, may not be the right answer, at least in an absolute sense. All right? Question number one.
Is a Christian under moral obligation to celebrate Christmas? That is, as a Christian's conscience, enlightened by Scripture, knows that he has a moral obligation to honor the Lord one day in seven, the Sabbath, the Christian Sabbath, Lord's Day, as he has a moral obligation to come to the Lord's table, this do in remembrance of me, a moral obligation to gather with God's people, forsaking not the assembling of yourselves together, is a Christian under moral obligation to celebrate Christmas? If yes? Why?
If no? Why? All right? How many believe that a Christian is under moral obligation to celebrate Christmas?
Wonderful. But the only thing, the only question on which there's going to be complete unanimity. All right? How many believe he is not?
Wonderful. We're of one mind. Now that's easy to raise your hand. I want you to open your mouth.
If not, why not? Why is a Christian not under moral obligation? To celebrate Christmas in any shape, form, size, whatever? Why is he not?
Jerry, and speak up please, and then I'll repeat it for you, Leslie, and for our dear friends, okay?
All right? There is no express commandment in Scripture to do so. And is that enough for you?
Yes, for Jerry it is. If he had an express command, that would alter it. Well, there is none. He's not going to have his conscience bound.
He's not bound by anything other than the express command of Scripture. Someone else wanted to give a reason why you believe a Christian is not under moral obligation to celebrate Christmas. Anyone else? Or is that behind the unanimity?
Yes. Linda? Well, we're going to eventually come into that. But right now, we're just isolating this issue.
We're all agreed a Christian is under no moral obligation to celebrate Christmas. Jerry Smith has said the rationale for that is, there is no express command to do so that settles it. And does that settle it for the rest of you? All right?
Is Christmas a Moral Obligation NOT to Celebrate for Christians?
Okay. Now then, listen carefully to my next question. Is a Christian under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas? You see, this is different from the first question.
The first question is, should I feel pressure at my back to celebrate Christmas? This question is, suppose someone feels pressure to celebrate Christmas. Is he violating a moral principle? Is the Christian under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas?
In other words, if you see someone celebrating Christmas, do you have grounds to believe he is violating a moral principle?
Now see, that makes us think a little bit. All right? Is a Christian under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas? Is a Christian under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas?
If yes, why? How many of you believe that some Christians are under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas? And if you believe that any Christian is under moral obligation not to celebrate it, got one, only one, two, three, four, oh, we're getting the groundswell here. All right.
You shall not follow a multitude to do evil. All right. Whoops.
We're going to come to that. Is a Christian under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas? If so, why?
All right. You want to tell us, Ernie? Okay. Ernie says, it is a matter of conscience, and for some Christians, it is a moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas, not to celebrate Christmas, because in Romans 14, a passage we're going to, we're going to come back to and root around in much more fully later on.
The scripture is clear that if we do that, concerning which we have any question that it pleases God, for us it is sin. Romans 14, 23. He that doubts is condemned if he eats, because he eats not of faith. Whatsoever is not of faith is sin.
For some Christians, it is sin to celebrate Christmas. In their consciences, the association of the very word, Christ Mass, gives them real problems. Their understanding of the origin of the celebration, that when the Roman Empire was, quote, Christianized, all of the major pagan holidays were also Christianized, and Christmas was one of them. And so, because of the very, the word Christmas dripping with Romish connotations, an understanding of the origins, paganism baptized into Christianity, because of, thirdly, the connotations of the wretched sin that is proliferated at Christmas, the sin of irresponsible spending, the sin of crass materialism, the sin of drunkenness, the sin of ribaldry, the... They say, I simply cannot, with good conscience, have anything to do with it.
So for that Christian, it is a moral obligation not to celebrate it. You follow me? So that when I ask the question, is a Christian under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas, the answer is, for some Christians, yes, they are under moral obligation not to celebrate Christmas, because they cannot celebrate it, as unto the Lord in faith that that celebration is well-pleasing unto God.
Am I making... You're following me?
Christmas and the Doctrine of Christian Liberty
You're making sense. All right? Next question.
In the light of these answers, into what broad category of Christian living does this whole issue of Christmas fit? If we're trying to slot it in to a broad category of Christian living, what is the category, into which the subject of the celebration of Christmas fits?
Jerry?
All right. It fits into the category of what we know as the doctrine of Christian liberty. And historically, that term, Christian liberty, refers to those things which are not expressly commanded by Scripture, or expressly forbidden by Scripture, and concerning which good and godliness, holy Christians may have a differing pressure of conscience. It fits into the category of Christian liberty.
And because it does, we must bring to bear upon it the major principles set forth in the Scriptures with regard to those watershed passages that address the subject of Christian liberty. Now, that subject comes to us in its most dense passage, passages where? Someone already mentioned one of them. Eli? All right, one passage is 1 Corinthians, we should say all the way 1 Corinthians 8, 9, and 10. All right, 1 Corinthians 8, 9, and 10. And then what's the other watershed passage that addresses this subject, Bill? Romans chapter 14.
So whenever you're wrestling with an issue concerning Christian liberty, a practice that is neither commanded nor forbidden, as our confession clearly states. In fact, it would be helpful for us to turn to our confession that's found in our hymn books under the subject of Christian liberty, page 681. The opening two paragraphs deal with the liberty that is ours in Christ, in which we are made free from the guilt of sin, the condemning wrath of God, the rigor and curse of the law, etc. Now, the issue we're concerned with is taken up in item number two. God alone is Lord of the conscience, who has left it free from the doctrines and commandments of men, which are in anything contrary to his word or not contained in it. So that to believe such doctrines or obey such commands out of conscience is to betray true liberty of conscience and the requiring of an implicit faith in God. And so we're concerned with this issue. And so we're concerned with this
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this whole matter of Christian liberty, our consciences, by the grace of God and the work of Christ in the gospel, are free from the commandments of men. We are Christ's bond servants, and we must never allow ourselves to come into bondage to the commandments of men. Well then, coming to the watershed passage, I'd like us to turn to Romans 14. Now these issues came to light under apostolic guidance, not with respect to shall we or shall we not celebrate Christmas or Easter, but it came to light with reference to such things as shall we keep certain feast days which may or may not, and the issue is not that clear, may or may not have been associated with some of the special feast days mandated by Old Testament Moses. It may well be that it was certain feast days that were simply part of the Roman culture which was a pagan culture. So that issue came to light, the issue of liberty of conscience, what do I do where God has neither commanded nor forbidden something. It came to light in conjunction with the issue of days. It came to light with the issue of foods, wine.
It came to light. In 1 Corinthians 8, with respect to the issue of meat offered to an idol, with meat that was sold in a bargain meat market outside the idol's temple. So what we must do as we come to those passages where we have days and drinks and meats and meats offered to idols, we must seek to dig beneath the specific expression of these issues that have to do with those matters and lay hold of the principles that apply whenever we are wrestling with the issue of Christian liberty. God has neither commanded nor forbidden that I wear a tie.
And if someone came up to me and said, you must wear a tie in order to please God, I'd say no. I'd take my tie off and stick my liberty under his Pharisaic nose. And if someone then said you must not wear a tie, I'd get one of those, oh, remember when they were about six inches wide, with the nice bright colors that our brother Bert often has in his ties, and I'd wear it, and I'd say there, show me from the Bible where I can't wear this. As Calvin said, he never, never scrupled about showing up and offending Pharisees.
Reading Romans 14: Principles for Christian Liberty
So, the issues come to us in those things, but we've got to dig beneath those specific issues and lay hold. And now I want, in the time that remains, to see if we can lay hold afresh, and this is where I'm putting some of you old-timers to the test. What are the major principles that must guide our thinking with respect to how we relate to issues of Christian liberty and how we relate to others who are wrestling with the issues of Christian liberty as they pertain to the circumstances of their lives? So, in that category, what are the major principles that must guide our thinking and our conduct? And remember, brethren, it's always in that order. We've got to think right to do what's right. Otherwise, if you attack the doing without the thinking, you just have a wooden framework, and the minute someone gets in the situation that you haven't described in the doing, they're left without any rudder, without any compass, because they never wrestled with the principles that need to govern our thinking.
1 Corinthians 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 13, 14, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 21, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 3, 35, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42, 35, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49, 41, 42, 43, 45, 44, 45, 45, 47, 50, 51, 42, 45, 46, 47, 50, 51, 52, 52, 51, 52, 53, 52, 53, 53, 54, 57, 52, 53, 54, 05. And even if we're away from those specifics, we're able to say, all right, in this situation, where's my compass? My thinking is right. Therefore, it will be the mother of proper action. All right? What are the major principles, then, in Romans chapter 14? We're going to Stick primarily with Romans 14 this morning. Let me read the passage, and then I would like you to tell me what are the major principles that are to regulate our thinking. Him that is weak in faith, receive, yet not for decisions of scruples. That is, don't receive him with a view to saying, okay, this guy can't eat this meat, this guy can't do this, and I'm going to receive him, but I'm not really receiving him with all of his hang-ups that I regard as hang-ups.
I'm only receiving him to get him close enough to straighten him out. I'm going to receive him with a view to zapping him, all right? He said, now receive him, but let it be true, open-hearted, unfeigned reception. You don't receive him in order to put him under censorious scrutiny.
One man has faith to eat all things, but he that is weak eats only earth. Do not let him who eats set it not him who does not eat, and do not let him that does not eat judge him that does eat, for God has received him. Who are you that judges the servant of another? To his own Lord he stands or falls, yes.
He should be made to stand, for the Lord has power to make him stand. One man esteems one day above another. Another esteems every day alone. Like, let each man be fully assured in his own mind.
He that regards the day, regards it unto the Lord. And he that eats, eats unto the Lord, for he gives God thanks. And he that eats not, unto the Lord he eats not, and gives God thanks. For none of us lives to himself, and none dies to himself.
For whether we live, we live unto the Lord. Or whether we die, we die unto the Lord. For to this end. I'm sorry, we die to the Lord, whether we live therefore or die, we are the Lord's.
For to this end, Christ died and lived again, that he might be Lord of both the dead and the living. But you, why do you judge your brother? Or you again, why do you set it not your brother? For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of God.
For it is written, as I live, saith the Lord, to me every knee shall bow and every tongue shall confess. So then, each one of us shall give account of himself to God. Let us not therefore judge one another any more, but judge this rather, that no man put a stumbling block in his brother's way or an occasion of falling. I know and am persuaded in the Lord Jesus that nothing is unclean of itself, save to him that accounts anything to be unclean, to him it is unclean.
For if because of... If because of meat your brother is grieved, you no longer walk in love.
Do not destroy with your meat him for whom Christ died. Do not then let your good be evil spoken of, for the kingdom of God is not eating and drinking, but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. For he that herein serves Christ is well-pleasing to God and approved of men. So then, let us...
Let us follow after the things which make for peace and things whereby we may edify or build up one another. Do not overthrow for meat's sake the work of God. All things indeed are clean. Howbeit, it is evil for that man who eats with offense.
It is good not to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor to do anything whereby your brother stumbles. The faith that you have, have to yourself before God. Happy is he that judges not himself in that which he approves. But he that doubts is condemned if he eat, because he does not eat of faith, and whatsoever is not of faith is sin.
Maintaining Peace in the Church Regarding Christmas
All right. What are the major principles now? The things that by God's grace have kept us from having a civil war over the celebration of Christmas in this church for years. And I know from a pastoral standpoint we've had some people that were ready to start a civil war.
On the one hand, we've had those that are aware of the pagan origins of the celebration, its associations with Rome, the horrible fruits of it in terms of sin, really were disappointed in me that I did not stand in this pulpit or the pulpit that's now in the multipurpose room when it was in the cracker box or when it was in one of the schools and in vain against... any form of the celebration of Christmas.
They really felt, poor Pastor Martin, I respect him in so many areas, but in this area he's just a little bit a coward. He's a little bit accommodating, a little bit worldly. They wanted to bend the whole church to their convictions, and we've not bent. And there are others who, seeing some who had scruples about it, they weren't quite as aggressive, but they would have felt a lot more comfortable if I had stood up and said, you silly, stupid, overly scrupulous people, get on with it!
Have some fun with the rest of us. But God's kept us, and we've maintained peace, and we don't come into potential civil war. There's no wars and rumors of war with December 25th coming on every year. Well, these are the principles that have worked their way into the bloodstream of this church.
Well, what are they? Okay, what's the first principle in this passage? The first major principle with respect to matters of Christian liberty generically, and Christian liberty specifically with regard to the issue of the celebration of Christmas. What's the first principle in the passage?
Principle 1: Recognizing Strong and Weak Consciences
All right, Chuck? All right, that there will be within any healthy church, for remember, this wasn't an infantile church troubled with all kinds of internal problems like the church at Corinth. This was fundamentally a strong, vigorous, healthy church at Rome. That's clear in Paul's greetings to them where he speaks of their faith being known throughout the whole world.
Toward the end of the epistle, he lets them know that he hopes to shift his base of fundamental support for his missionary endeavors from Antioch to Rome and be sent by the church at Rome on to Spain for new gospel endeavors and enterprises. This was a healthy church, yet within that church there were these two categories of people with regard to matters of Christian liberty. This was a healthy church, yet within that church, there were these two categories of people with regard to matters of Christian liberty. Some are described as strong, some are regarded as weak, and without going into a dissertation on in what sense are they strong and in what sense are they weak, remember now, this is not a generic term describing what we would call the whole complex of their spiritual lives. It is with respect to these specific issues that some are strong. In other words, they have a conscience that have not been able to has more light in the light of the full revelation of God's word. They are the strong, and others are the weak.
That is, their conscience is not fully enlightened with respect to the extent of their liberty in Christ. But remember, the strong and the weak in this setting, though they are two real categories, as Mr. Davies has suggested, they are not generic statements. They are specific statements, strong and weak, with respect to the specific issue at hand.
For example, the strong man who is able to eat all meats and drink all beverages, if he does not manifest the measure of love that makes him willing to say with Paul, I'll neither eat meat nor drink wine nor do anything that causes my brother to stumble, at that point he's weak in love. He may be strong. He may be strong in his conscience regarding things indifferent, but he's weak in love if he is not willing for love's sake to forego his liberty. So remember, strong and weak are not broad, generic descriptions of Christian conditions, but with respect to the specific issue.
So within the church, there will be the strong, there will be the weak. All right? So we have these categories. Now, what principles are to regulate the way they operate?
Do we have the? Do we have the strong go off and start the strong conscience church at Rome? And then the weak go off and start the weak conscience church at Rome?
No. He obviously assumes that they're going to get on together in the same house and do so peacefully. So what principles then are to be at work in them? We've seen the categories.
Principle 2: No Despising or Judging
Now, what are the principles that help them to work together? All right, Bill?
Bill. Oh, I'm sorry. Yeah, the other Bill had a chance. Bill in the blue shirt.
Bill Michael. All right? All right. All right.
All right. I'm going to keep it a little louder with my tin ear here, Bill.
Okay. All right? So Bill is suggesting that the first principle is that we leave each to answer to his own master. I'd like to hold that off for a little bit.
I think there's another principle that is highlighted before that as we work through the passage.
That's to help us obey this other principle. Here's the weak brother. Here's the strong brother. They recognize their difference.
They see it manifested in terms of how they keep certain days, how they eat certain foods. What is the tendency of the strong brother?
Despise. All right. In what sense would he despise it?
Okay, looking down. There's the key. It's not despise in the sense that, you know, I despise spinach. But to look down the nose that this guy's not quite with it.
When he sees this brother who cannot. Enjoy all foods. This brother who feels he must keep certain days. And this man knows, in Christ I'm free from this.
His tendency with regard to the weak will be to look down his nose at him and say, What in the world is wrong with you? Get with it, man. Don't you know you're free in Christ? All right?
So he says, verse 3, Let not him who eats, set it not him that does not eat. Don't let him despise him. Don't let him. Look down his nose at him.
And what is the tendency of the weak who sees the strong? Remember, the strong with regard to matters of Christian liberty. Fully enjoying his liberty. What's his tendency as he's walking so carefully?
He won't eat this. He won't eat that. He'll keep this day. He'll keep that day.
What's his tendency when he looks at his strong brother?
Yes. Delayed?
To think that he's more godly. Yes. He assumes, well, if he was only as spiritual as I am, he'd know that someone really walking with God wouldn't take his glass of wine. I mean, if he were spiritual, surely he would not this.
He would this. So he says, okay, I'm going to deal with both of you. I don't want the strong to look down their snoot at the weak. And I don't want the weak to stand in judgment of the strong.
The first thing you must do is establish in your mind and heart, when you become aware, that within this congregation there are differing convictions and differing practices with regard to the celebration of Christmas, that those of you who can celebrate it to the hilt in Christ, don't look down at others who can't and say, what in the world is wrong with them? Even if you don't say it with your lips, don't do it in your heart. This is a heart issue. And you who feel, if only you, don't you know the pagan origins of this thing?
Don't you know Christ mass ties you with, don't you, you unspiritual, unenlightened. No, no, God says don't do that. Don't.
So there's the first principle. The strong are not to set at naught the weak, and the weak are not to judge the strong. Now, here's where Bill's principle. Principle number two is to buttress that posture.
Principle 3: Each Answers to Christ Alone
What great theological, biblical issue, needs to grip our hearts. And here it is. Who are you to judge the servant of another? Verse four.
To his own Lord he stands or falls. Yes, he shall be made to stand, for the Lord has power to make him stand. In other words, the apostle says, look, you must mutually recognize that you stand under the same Lord, and you answer to the same Lord, and he has enshared his Lordship with you. So get off the throne.
Stop trying to share his authority over the conscience of your brother. That's my place, not yours. Bug off. Back off.
Mind your business. Okay? That's the second great principle, is that we recognize from the heart that each believer stands under the Lordship of Christ and ends up in the same place. He answers to Christ and to Christ alone.
All right? What's the next great principle?
Principle 4: Be Fully Persuaded in Your Own Mind Before God
Just think down through the passage, all right? Jen?
Okay, whatever we do, we must be fully persuaded in our own mind. Verse five. One man esteems one day above another, another esteems every day alike. Let each man be fully assured in his own mind.
Now that means, you can't simply go with the flow in terms of the consensus around you. You have got to take the time before God with an open Bible to wrestle through this issue for yourself. No second-hand actions based upon second-hand convictions. Let each one be fully assured in his own mind.
And in the context, that means recognizing Christ's Lordship over me. Lord Jesus, can I, before your face, celebrate Christmas? Can I, before your face, eat this food, drink this beverage? If I cannot before the face of my Master, then it doesn't matter what kind of pressure is on me from the consensus of those about me.
That is inconsequential. Because I don't answer to those who make up the consensus. I answer to my Lord. So I must be fully persuaded in my own mind before Christ.
And then he goes on to amplify sort of the confluence of these principles. Verse 6. He that regards the day, if he's a true Christian, regards it to the Lord. You see, if you're a true believer and you celebrate Christmas, you don't say, on December 24th, Lord Jesus, goodbye till the 26th.
See what I'm saying? You do not divorce your celebration from Christ. You do not, for a period of Christmas Eve through Christmas Day, think and act as a non-Christian. Divorcing yourself from the consciousness that you live before the face of your Lord.
That you answer to your Lord. No, you regard it unto the Lord. You can, and with good conscience say, Lord, thank you for this wonderful family time. Thank you for a day which with all of its paganized trappings still forces people to say the name of my blessed Lord.
They gotta say, Christ, Christmas. Oh, I know, some put the X and they don't know what they're doing, but we know. It's a He. In the Greek alphabet, the first letter of Christos.
And we know, that as unto the Lord we can celebrate that day. He that regards the day, regards it to the Lord. He that eats, eats to the Lord, for he gives God thanks. He that eats not, unto the Lord he does not eat and give thanks.
He comes to Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and says, Lord, thank you for another day in which to serve you. Thank you, Lord, for a day in which I'm not buried beneath all of the rubble of the trappings, of Christmas. He thanks God for that. He keeps not today as unto the Lord, in the presence of the Lord, without judging those who are buried in the day as unto the Lord.
Natural. No, it isn't. You got the Holy Spirit dwelling in you. He helps you to do many things that aren't natural.
Naturally, we want to make everyone line up with us. But Paul envisions a wonderful context in which we are perfectly content to say, I know my brother John is going to get up this morning in his bare house. He doesn't have a wreath. He doesn't have a Christmas tree.
He doesn't have a present. He's going to get on his knees and he's going to keep not today as unto the Lord. And I'm going to get up buried with presents and tinsel and toys and all the rest. And I'm going to keep it as unto the Lord.
And we both are thankful that we're under the reign of the same Lord. That's what Paul is saying. You see that in the passage. All right?
So we read on. None of us lives to himself if we're true believers. None of us dies to himself. For whether we live, we live to the Lord.
Whether we die, we die to the Lord. Whether we live, therefore, die we are the Lord's. For to this end, Christ died and lived again that he might be Lord, both of the dead and of the living. You see the tremendous emphasis in the midst of this tacky issue.
Paul doesn't give some artificial rules. He said it comes down to the very nerve center of who a Christian is. A Christian is one who from the depths of his being has not only embraced Jesus as his only substitute and sin bearer, but he's embraced him as his sovereign Lord. Lord over his holidays.
Lord over what he eats and doesn't eat. Lord over the days he'll keep and the days he doesn't keep. His Lordship extends to every single facet of my life. And he flushes that out.
And then he says, he goes on to say, coming back, you see, he started with saying, don't judge one another. And here's my fundamental reason. Each one answers to his Lord. Now he comes back and he gives another punch in that direction.
But you, why do you judge your brother? Or again, why do you set it not your brother? You see the two temptations? To judge, here he deals with the strong first.
And why do you set it not? I'm sorry, the weak. The weak who would judge his brother and then the strong. Why do you set it not your brother?
You have this wonderful bookend construction where he deals with the issue. Then he flushes out the whole matter of the Lordship of Christ. And then he puts another bookend on it and says, no judging, no despising, because Christ is Lord. We shall all stand before the judgment seat of God.
Principle 5: Exercise Liberty with Love and Sensitivity to Others
Each one of us shall give account of himself. of himself to God. Now then, as though they didn't get the message, he says, now, what's the summary of everything I've said? It's this.
Let us not therefore judge one another anymore. So there is the major principle. There are two categories, the strong and the weak. The first directive is, first of all, that they're to receive one another with their strong and weak conscience.
Secondly, they are not to sit in censoriousness, in judgment, snoot, looking down to snoot, standing, in judgment, and he gives the fundamental reason, the Lordship of Christ. But now he comes with another principle that he begins to enlarge upon in 13b. And what is that principle? Right, Donnie?
A little louder, please. Right, the whole matter of how we relate to our brother who has a differing conscience and that our liberty in Christ is to be exercised with a deep sensitivity to how it, it will affect our brother. You see, he's dealt with the horizontal. Our liberty before the eye of Christ, we might say, is a good summary statement.
Now he's dealing with the exercise of our liberty before the eye of our brethren. For our liberty, many times, is not something just exercised before Christ, but it's exercised in the presence and in the sight of our brethren. Oh boy, time is gone. Well, basically then, what he says, is that if I know that my brother, whose conscience tells him, I shouldn't do this, I shouldn't do this, if by exercising my liberty in his presence, I embolden him to do it against his conscience, I'm causing him to sin, I must be willing, in his presence, to back off from the exercise of my liberty. Now this is not saying that if the one who doesn't have the liberty is going to be affected, a Pharisee, and say, you've got to keep my rules, you've got to bend to me. No, no, what he is saying is, here is a man who has a genuine scruple of conscience about an issue, and if, knowing that, you exercise your liberty in his presence, you then nudge him into doing what for him is sin, you are not walking in love, you are causing him to stumble, and he says in verse 20, do not overthrow for meat's sake the work of God. Now a concrete example would be this, if you know there's a brother in the church who has
Conclusion: Application to Christmas and Beyond
reservations of conscience about celebrating Christmas, but you're good friends, you don't invite him over to your house, if you've got a Christmas tea, you're going to have a Christmas dinner, you're going to sit down in the living room and have presents open, and out of love to you, and out of respect for your friendship, he comes, and all the while he's there, he feels he's participating in this pagan holiday and sinning, you didn't walk in love. Show your love to that brother by taking him out for a steak dinner between the 25th and the 31st, and show your love in a non-Christmas celebration context, you follow me? That's the great principle that he enlarges upon in this next part of the passage. Well, as I said, our time is gone, and I trust that this review of these principles has been helpful to us as we face the Christmas holidays, but brethren, it has application in so many other areas, and one of the great joys of laboring amongst you as a people is to be to see the extent to which you've internalized these principles so that we're not all a bunch of cookie-cutter Christians. When I go into a situation that all the women are dressed alike, and all the men are dressed alike, my nose says something's fishy here. Something is bad wrong. On
matters of liberty, our basic dress styles, and our basic living styles, and the rest, there should be a broad spectrum of expression within any healthy congregation, and when you begin to see a wooden conformity, you know that people have given up being persuaded in their own minds, and they've begun to just go with the flow and fall in with the consensus. The day that happens, that's the beginning of the death of true liberty of conscience, where we are prepared to wrestle through these issues before God, and be fully persuaded in our own minds. Well, as I said, our time is gone. Let's pray and ask God to help us in the days to come. Our Father, we're so thankful that we have the Scriptures as a lamp to our feet and the light to our pathway. Thank you for the way you've helped your people in this place to internalize these great principles over the years, and for those for whom these things are new, we pray you would help them to grasp them, to internalize them by the Spirit's help to apply them even to the celebration of this season. We look to you for your grace and help through our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.
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Passages Expounded
Romans 14:1-23
This entire chapter is read and systematically expounded as the primary biblical framework for understanding Christian liberty and its application to Christmas.
Texts Expounded
auto_stories
This chapter is the primary text for understanding Christian liberty, particularly concerning days and foods, which Martin applies to Christmas.